Women Enjoying Freedom and Democracy! Chimpy’s New Iraq

December 13, 2007 by Jolly Roger 

Here’s another cross post. This one is one that’ll hit home with a lot of us. I have 2 daughters and a wife I love very much, and any opperssion of women anywhere bothers me. But as you will see, this goes way beyond just “oppression.”

It was pretty damned funny when they sent Pickles off to the Middle East to talk about the plight of women in the Gulf countries. It was also pretty damn funny to listen to Chimpy’s moans over the Saudi rape victim that then got sentenced to be whipped to add to the humiliation of her rape.

“Funny?” you say. “How can anyone find anything funny about the plight of oppressed women in the Arab world?”

What you say here is true. What women have to endure in such places is horrible indeed. But it is my opinion that the wife of the region’s worst oppressor of women shouldn’t have been the one doing the advocating. And how can the oppressor, himself, give a damn about a girl in Saudi Arabia after the horrors he’s unleashed on MILLIONS of women in the region?

There’s no doubt about it; Chimpy has dealt a serious blow to the cause of human rights for women. Let’s look at some examples from Kurdish Iraq, whereKurdistan Women women lived in a relatively liberalized society until Chimpy unleashed his Oedpial crusade.

They lie in the Sulaimaniyah hospital morgue in Iraqi Kurdistan, set out on white-tiled slabs. A few have been shot or strangled, some beaten to death, but most have been burned. One girl, a lock of hair falling across her half-closed eyes, could almost be on the point of falling asleep. Burns have stretched the skin on another young woman’s face into a fixed look of surprise.

These women are not casualties of battle. In fact, the cause of death is generally recorded as “accidental”, although their bodies often lie unclaimed by their families.

“It is getting worse, especially the burnings,” says Khanim Rahim Latif, the manager of Asuda, an Iraqi organisation based in Kurdistan that works to combat violence against women. “Just here in Sulaimaniyah, there were 400 cases of the burning of women last year.” Lack of electricity means that every house has a plentiful supply of oil, and she accepts that some cases may be accidents. But the nature and scale of the injuries suggest that most were deliberate, she says, handing me the morgue photographs of one young woman after another. Many of the bodies bear the unmistakable signs of having been subjected to intense heat.

“In many cases the woman is accused of adultery, or of a relationship before she is married, or the marriage is not sanctioned by the family,” Khanim says. Her husband, brother or another relative will kill her to restore their “honour”. “If he is poor the man might be arrested; if he is important, he won’t be. And in most cases, it is hidden. The body might be dumped miles away and when it is found the family says, ‘We don’t have a daughter.’” In other cases, disputes over such murders are resolved between families or tribes by the payment of a forfeit, or the gift of another woman. “The authorities say such agreements are necessary for social stability, to prevent revenge killings,” says Khanim.

In March 2004 George Bush said that “the advance of freedom in the Middle East has given new rights and new hopes to women … the systematic use of rape by Saddam’s former regime to dishonour families has ended”. This may have given some people the impression that the American and British invasion of Iraq had helped to improve the lives of its women. But this is far from the case.

Even under Saddam, women in Iraq - including in semi-autonomous Kurdistan - were widely recognised as among the most liberated in the Middle East. They held important positions in business, education and the public sector, and their rights were protected by a statutory family law that was the envy of women’s activists in neighbouring countries. But since the 2003 invasion, advances that took 50 years to establish are crumbling away. In much of the country, women can only now move around with a male escort. Rape is committed habitually by all the main armed groups, including those linked to the government. Women are being murdered throughout Iraq in unprecedented numbers.

In October the UN Assistance Mission in Iraq (Unami) expressed serious concern over the rising incidence of so-called honour crimes in Iraqi Kurdistan, confirming that 255 women had been killed in just the first six months of 2007, three-quarters of them by burning. An earlier Unami report cited 366 burns cases in Dohuk in 2006, up from 289 the year before, although most were not fatal. In Irbil, the emergency management centre had reported 576 burns cases since 2003, resulting in 358 deaths.

When questioned, Iraqi doctors have told UN investigators that many of these burnings are self-inflicted. “More than half of these women had sustained between 70-100% burns which, according to doctors, suggested that they were self-inflicted,” the earlier Unami report said. A UN human rights officer has relayed to me the words of one judicial investigator in Irbil: “The woman is unhappy, or there is domestic abuse, but the family doesn’t listen. So she does it because she wants to draw attention to herself.”

The claim that some of these injuries are self-inflicted is something you hear from different quarters in Iraq. The human rights minister in the Kurdistan regional government, Yousif Aziz, says: “[Burnings take] place daily. Some are killed, some burn themselves.” Activists, however, say that if the wounds are self-inflicted, it is because the women have been forced to do it.

The Iraqi penal code prescribes leniency for those who commit such crimes for “honourable motives”, enabling some of the men involved to get off with no more than a fine. The Kurdish authorities, Aziz says, have removed these provisions for leniency from the code - but the killings continue to mount. “The politicians say the situation of women is all right with the new constitution in Iraq and new laws in Kurdistan,” says Khanim, “but it is deteriorating.”

I don’t recall Pickles saying a word about this. Do you? Women in Iraq can’t go to the store by themselves, let alone smoke like a chimney and drink like a fish, Pickles-style. Theyd’a whupped her ass into oblivion.

The plight of women in Kurdistan isn’t restricted to the Kurds. As we can see from this story, they suffer plenty in Arab Iraq as well.

On the first day of class, two male teenagers entered a girls’ high school in the Tobji neighborhood, clutching AK-47 assault rifles. The young Shiite fighters handed the principal a handwritten note and ordered her to assemble the students in the courtyard, witnesses said.

“All girls must wear hijab,” she read aloud, her voice trembling. “If the girls don’t wear hijab, we will close the school or kill the girls.”

That October day Sara Mustafa, 14, a secular Sunni Arab, also trembled. The next morning, she covered up with an Islamic head scarf for the first time. The young fighters now controlled her life. “We could not do anything,” Sara recalled.

The Mahdi Army of Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr is using a new generation of youths, some as young as 15, to expand and tighten its grip across Baghdad, but the ruthlessness of some of these young fighters is alienating Sunnis and Shiites alike.

The fighters are filling the vacuum of leadership created by a 10-month-old U.S.-led security offensive. Hundreds of senior and mid-level militia members have been arrested, killed or forced into hiding, weakening what was once the second most powerful force in Iraq after the U.S. military. But the militia still rules through fear and intimidation, often under the radar of U.S. troops.

“JAM is alive and well in Tobji, although they have gotten younger, like in many other areas,” said Lt. Col. Steven Miska, using a military acronym derived from the militia’s name in Arabic. For much of this year, his soldiers operated in many Shiite and mixed enclaves of Baghdad, including Tobji.

The rise of this new generation is a reflection of the Mahdi Army’s deep infiltration of society and could presage a turbulent resurgence of the militia as the U.S. military reduces troop levels. The emergence also highlights the struggle Sadr faces in his quest to control the capital and lead Iraq.

In late August, the 34-year-old cleric declared a freeze in operations, in part to exert more authority over his unruly, decentralized militia. Many followers stood down, so much that U.S. commanders give Sadr some credit for a downturn in violence this year. But some militia leaders have ignored Sadr’s freeze, and their young, power-hungry foot soldiers may ultimately undermine the cleric’s popular appeal.

“We have to show people we are not weak,” said Ali, a 19-year-old Mahdi Army fighter in Tobji.

Do note that it is the Mehdi Army writing the rules in this Baghdad neighborhood. Not the Government. Not the “surge” forces. And the women are suffering badly for it.

Why didn’t Pickles stop in Baghdad to complain about this? Why are the only Muslim women worth protecting ones who don’t live in Iraq? How come our Chimpromised MSM never sees any of this, but sees everything in Saudi Arabia?

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Comments

7 Responses to “Women Enjoying Freedom and Democracy! Chimpy’s New Iraq”

  1. Larry on December 13th, 2007 7:34 pm

    The only plight of women Pickles will notice is the one where the nearest bar is filled with thirsty women, much like Pickles, but with some very weak Bourbon.

  2. Jolly Roger on December 13th, 2007 7:54 pm

    A tragedy that I’m sure Jenna and little Babs could appreciate as well.

  3. Dusty on December 13th, 2007 8:00 pm

    The Bush women are real pieces of work aren’t they? Wonder how Laura stayed sober long enough to finish her trip?

    Laura wouldn’t know a woman’s issue if it bit her in her ass.

  4. Jolly Roger on December 13th, 2007 8:02 pm

    Piece of “work” is not how I would have characterized them.

  5. Dusty on December 13th, 2007 8:58 pm

    Well, how about ‘working girls’? ;)

  6. Women Enjoying Freedom and Democracy! Chimpy’s New Iraq on December 14th, 2007 2:12 am

    [...] post by Jolly Roger This was written by . Posted on Thursday, December 13, 2007, at 7:49 pm. Filed under [...]

  7. Women Enjoying Freedom and Democracy! Chimpy’s New Iraq : Revolt Blog on December 14th, 2007 7:25 pm

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